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Augsburg Confession (Confessio Augustana)
The Augsburg Confession was presented by Lutheran princes and city delegates to Emperor Charles V at the Diet of Augsburg in 1530, drafted primarily by Melanchthon with Luther's close oversight from Coburg. It functioned simultaneously as a political document, a confessional identity statement, and a catechetical summary of evangelical doctrine in 28 articles. Subscription to it became the basis of membership in the Schmalkaldic League, embedding this text in the constitutive political and devotional identity of Protestant dynastic life for generations. It was incorporated as the first item in the Lutheran Book of Concord (1580), which every subscribing territorial prince formally affirmed as the doctrinal basis of his territory.
1530Latin and German·Wettin (Saxony) · Hohenzollern (Brandenburg) +5Confirmed